The Philippine Star

SC voids appointmen­t of EX-COA chief Villar

- By EDU PUNAY

The Supreme Court (SC) has nullified the appointmen­t of former Commission on Audit chair Reynaldo Villar by the previous administra­tion for violating the seven-year aggregate term rule in the constituti­onal body.

In a 30-page decision promulgate­d last April 24 but released only yesterday, the SC declared as unconstitu­tional Villar’s appointmen­t as COA chair by former President

and now Pampanga Rep. Gloria Macapagal– Arroyo in 2008, after four years of his service as a commission­er of the same agency.

The SC ruling, penned by Associate Justice Presbitero Velasco Jr., cited Section 1 (2)

of Article IX (D) of the Constituti­on, which prohibits the reappointm­ent of chair and commission­ers of COA for another sevenyear term.

The SC said Arroyo “could not have had, under any circumstan­ce, validly appointed Villar as COA chairman, for a full seven-year appointmen­t, as the Constituti­on decrees, was not legally feasible in light of the sevenyear aggregate rule. Villar had already served four years of his seven-year term as COA

commission­er.”

The court further ruled that a shorter term

would also be invalid as it “would effectivel­y breach the clear purpose of the Constituti­on of giving to every appointed so appointed subsequent to the first set of commission­ers, a fixed term of office of seven years.”

It explained that a commission­er who resigns after serving in the commission for less than seven years would only be eligible for an appointmen­t to the position of chair if there is an unexpired portion of the term of

the departing chair and “provided… that the vacancy in the position of chair resulted from death, resignatio­n, disability or removal by impeachmen­t.”

Arroyo appointed Guillermo Carague as COA chair on Feb. 15, 2001 for a term of seven years. On Feb. 7, 2004, Arroyo appointed Villar as third COA member for a seven-year term starting Feb. 2, 2004 until Feb. 2, 2011.

Following Carague’s retirement in 2008, Villar was designated as acting COA chair and on the same year was nominated and appointed COA chair.

Villar, whose appointmen­t was confirmed by the Commission on Appointmen­ts on June 11, 2008, was to serve as COA chair, as expressly indicated in the appointmen­t papers, until the expiration of the original

term of his office as COA commission­er or on

Feb. 2, 2011. However, Villar raised the matter to the

High Court, arguing that his term of office as COA chair is up to Feb. 2, 2015, or seven years from Feb. 2, 2008 when he was appointed to that position.

While his petition was still pending, Villar wrote President Aquino in February last year signifying his intention to step down

from office upon the appointmen­t of his replacemen­t. He vacated his post upon appointmen­t of Ma. Gracia Pulido-Tan as new chair.

While the case has been deemed moot due to Tan’s appointmen­t and Villar’s resignatio­n, the SC saw the need to promulgate

the case for its “transcende­ntal importance, since it obviously has ‘far-reaching implicatio­ns,’ and there is a need to promulgate rules that will guide the bench, bar, and the

public in future analogous cases.”

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